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Tune Identifier:"^someone_must_bid_adeiu_to_hackleman$"

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[Some one must bid adieu today]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: W. E. M. Hackleman Incipit: 33332 13334 44432 Used With Text: Lord, Is it I

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Lord, Is it I

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Some one must bid adieu today Refrain First Line: There comes a holy summons high Used With Tune: [Some one must bid adieu today]

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Lord, is it I

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon Hymnal: Glory Songs #86 (1907) First Line: Someone must bid adieu today Refrain First Line: There comes a holy summons Languages: English Tune Title: [Someone must bid adieu today]
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Lord, Is it I

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon Hymnal: Favorite Solos #53 (1908) First Line: Some one must bid adieu today Refrain First Line: There comes a holy summons high Languages: English Tune Title: [Some one must bid adieu today]

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Ina Duley Ogdon

1872 - 1964 Author of "Lord, is it I" in Glory Songs Ogdon, Ina Duley. (Rossville, Illinois, 1872--May 18, 1964, Toledo, Ohio). Disciples of Christ. Granddaughter of a Methodist minister, she was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Duley. Married James Ogdon. She wrote: "My father went with my mother to her church after his marriage to her, so I was brought up in the church of the Disciples of Christ." She wrote over three thousand hymns, anthems, cantatas, and miscellaneous verse. Her hymns include "Brighten the corner where you are," 1912; "Carry your cross with a smile," 1916; "My Lord abides;" "When you know Jesus too;" "Tell Jesus;" "Lighten the burden for someone;" "I have been saved," Her first hymn was "Open wide the window." Composer Charles Gabriel wrote, "Loved by thousands who have sung her hymns, she shrinks from celebrity in the knowledge that her songs are God-given and that without Him she could do nothing." See: Beattie, David J. (1931). The Romance of Sacred Song. London: Marshall, Morgan and Scott, Ltd. The Presbyterian Survey November 1952. The Toledo Blade, 19 May 1964. --Ernest K. Emurian, DNAH Archives Photo from Joseph Gardner collection from website "Ina Duly Ogdon Home" by Melissa Archibald (http://www.freewebs.com/marchi/inaphotosarticles.htm)

W. E. M. Hackleman

1868 - 1927 Composer of "[Someone must bid adieu today]" in Glory Songs William Edward Michael Hackleman USA 1868-1927. Born at Orange, IN, he grew up on a farm. At age 17 he was teaching singing classes and leading singing in meetings. He later taught public school for four years and studied music in Toronto, Canada, at the Conservatory of Music, under Italian composer, Francesco d'Auria, and also with other private teachers in New York City. He married Pearl C MNU, and they had four children: Edwin, Florence, Grace, and Gladys. He edited songbooks, composed music and lead music at state and national conventions of the Christian Church. He was an evangelist and served as president of the National Association of Church Musicians, and for five years was secretary to the Indiana Missionary Society. He led singing at the Centennial Convention in 1909 at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, PA, for an estimated crowd of 30,000. He also ran the Hackleman Music Company in Indianapolis, IN. He published 15 religious songbooks, some lyrics and many tunes. He died in an auto accident in St. Elmo, IL, enroute to a church convention. John Perry
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